Book blitz: A Little Bit Of Everything Lost - Stephanie Elliot - Guest post!
At 19, Marnie plunged into first love with Joe, a guy who was
completely wrong for her. Their romance was fast and exhilarating and like
nothing Marnie had ever experienced or understood. Just as quickly as it began,
it was over, with no explanation. He left her with unanswered questions and
unexpected feelings of loss and regret, and a quiet grief she would carry with
her for the next fifteen years.
When Joe returns, Marnie is a 34-year-old wife and mother to two rambunctious
little boys, who is slowly healing from a devastating loss. All the emotions
she suppressed from the past fifteen years surge to the surface, threatening to
ruin her marriage and destroy her family. She'll need to confront the one
person who hurt her the most to realize that love and loss sometimes go hand in
hand… and that you have to live with some of your toughest choices for the rest
of your life.
A
Little Bit of Everything Lost is part coming-of-age/part love story.
It's a story about a woman desperate to make peace with the past. It's for all
women who have ever experienced the magnitude of first love, whether it was a
lasting bond or a fleeting moment. Because first love - while it might not have
been the best love - is a love none of us ever forgets.
Stephanie Elliot is the author of A Little
Bit of Everything Lost, What She Left Us, and the novella, The Cell Phone Lot.
She is also a writer and editor and has written for a variety of newspapers,
magazines and websites. In her spare time she edits manuscripts for other
writers and proofs executive documents. She lives in Arizona with her husband
and three children.
GUEST POST
Today I have the pleasure of welcoming Stephanie Elliot to M's Bookshelf!
THREE TRUTHS and A LIE
When I set out to write A
Little Bit of Everything Lost, I started with a truth. There was an
ex-person who I had been thinking about. For a while. And I couldn't stop
thinking about him. Even though I was very happily married with three awesome
little kids. I think it was because I had felt there was unfinished business
there. I think this happens a lot with 'young' relationships. So, because I am
a writer, I decided to create my own ending. But what actually ended up
happening was that I didn't write 'my' ending. I took the shell of the person I
suspected I knew way back when, and then I created a new girl, a person I gave
a lot of grief to, Marnie, and then I told their story. Marnie's and Joe's
story.
In their story, I told little teeny parts
of some truths, and I told a lot of fake stuff. That's the fiction. I
completely made up their story based on a few things that I might have
remembered from the time I spent with this person who, when looking back, I
don't see why I even liked him that much. It was kind of cathartic to do this.
And if you were to read the book, you might think it's ALL fiction. Most of it
is. But there are some truths, so here is a list of THREE TRUTHS and a LIE.
It's up to you to guess the lie!
~I
once did contact an ex-boyfriend the exact same way that Marnie gets in touch
with Joe in the book. And he did reply to me.
~Lemons
are my favorite fruit for the very same reason they are Marnie's favorite
fruit.
~Just
like Marnie, I had a mix tape with the same music on it when I was in college -
The Cure, New Order, Oingo Boingo, Phil Collins, Def Leppard.
~The
original working title of A Little Bit of
Everything Lost was Checked Out.
Then it was titled Before the Beginning.
Then it was titled The Life After. I
cannot come up with titles for the life of me and hate trying to figure them out.
Leave a comment on which one you think is
the LIE and WHY? If you really want to know which ones are the TRUTH, read the
book and then feel free to email me after at stephanieelliot@gmail.com! You may
be surprised at what you discover!
Thank you so much for stopping by, Stephanie! This is a tough one...
I'll leave a comment with the one "truth" I think is a lie!
I'll leave a comment with the one "truth" I think is a lie!
Excerpt
Chapter
One
1988:
What Marnie Remembers
Don’t
go any lower, don’t go any lower. Oh my God, that feels so good, don’t go any
lower.
“Stop.”
“Why?”
“Because, it feels too good.”
He looked at her and smiled. A smile that
took her breath away, and scared her all at the same time.
“Plus, I don’t even know your name.” She
thought it started with a J.
“I told you. It’s Joe. And you’re Marnie."
Chapter Two
October 2004
The whole process irritated the hell out of Marnie.
The microwave timer buzzed, frozen pancakes warmed and ready.
October 2004
The whole process irritated the hell out of Marnie.
The microwave timer buzzed, frozen pancakes warmed and ready.
“You’re going to be late for the bus!” she
yelled as she searched the meat drawer for ham.
“Why don’t I do this the night before?” Marnie
muttered into the fridge. She found meat, made sandwiches, and moved to the
pantry to grab syrup for the pancakes.
The lid was sticky.
She heard the boys arguing about who got to
play Xbox first when they got home from school. They were going to be late.
Again. And the lid was covered in syrup. Again.
“Damn it, boys! Get down here. Now!”
They were still arguing as they bounded
down the stairs and Marnie knew Jeremy had taken his forefinger and thumb and
whacked his younger brother on the head because Trey yelped, “I’m telling!”
“No tattling,” Marnie threatened. “Or
there’ll be no soccer after school.”
“Good. I hate soccer practice,” Jeremy
said.
“Me too,” Trey agreed with his older
brother.
Marnie shook her head. There was no winning
here. She was losing the battle that was good parenting, and she didn’t know
how she was going to survive. High school – hell, junior high school – was still eons away.
The rumble of the bus wheels turning onto the
street signaled panic in the boys’ eyes.
“The bus!” Trey screamed.
“Grab a granola bar, your lunches and
backpacks, and run!”
No matter what chaos each morning brought,
Jeremy and Trey were endearing still, her little boys, taking the time to kiss
her, and to tell her they loved her. Every morning, no matter what, they
managed to love her. If only that were enough. If only.
As Trey buried his head into Marnie for a
hug, she inhaled the little boy smell of him. Oh God, how she wished they
didn’t have to grow up, didn’t have to become big boys. Big ones – well, big
eight-year-olds like Jeremy – were already showing signs of pulling away, of
needing her less and less. Of asking for fewer cuddles, and practically no more
bedtime stories, wanting rather to stay up late to watch basketball with Dad
when he was home. At least six-year-old Trey could still be babied. He and
Marnie would snuggle at night and make up stories about worms named Pinkster
and Swirmy, who lived in huts in their backyard, and ate muddy cakes filled
with flies.
Marnie sighed. “I love you boys. Have a
good day.” She touched her belly.
“Love you too, Mom. Bye!” And the door
banged behind them. Her double tornado gone. She heard them screaming down the
drive, Trey shouting for Jeremy to wait up for him, always, always chasing
after his older brother.
Marnie opened the microwave and took out
the mini pancakes the boys hadn’t had time to eat. She grabbed the syrup bottle
again, forgetting it was sticky.
“Damn it,” she said to no one, because no
one was home. It was Tuesday, and Stuart was gone.
She pulled a paper towel off the roll and
noticed it had a Fourth of July stars-and-stripes pattern on it. Summer seemed
like forever ago. She didn’t want to remember the summer that didn't happen. She
didn’t want to think of fireworks and pool parties, barbecues and sparklers.
And her boys, their tanned little bodies, their goggled faces, swimming until
they were so tired they would collapse into their beds with no coaxing. She
didn’t want to think about parades and fresh sugary-tart lemonade, neighborhood
get-togethers, of weekend trips to her parent’s lake house, all the things they
didn't get to do. She didn’t want to think about what she should be doing now.
Marnie turned the faucet on cold, saturated
the paper towel, and rubbed the top of the syrup bottle as best as she could to
clean it off. Then she doused the pancakes with syrup and popped the mini
pancakes into her mouth, one by one, filling the void with the golden yeasty
fluff, not feeling or tasting, just chewing… chewing until they were all gone; until
the anxiety settled in the pit of her stomach and she felt like she could begin
her day.
She ran a mental list through her head: the
dry cleaners, she had to proof photos from last weekend's shoot, a trip to the
grocery store. And she would have to stop by the post office to mail that
package that had been sitting on the foyer table for over a week now. The one
Stuart had asked her to mail.
When he got home last Thursday and spotted
it still there, he had sighed. “I didn’t have time today,” she said.
“Tomorrow,” she promised. “I’ll get to it tomorrow.”
“I’m home now. I can mail it tomorrow,” he
had said, but he hadn’t gotten around to doing it either.
The phone rang, Marnie wiped her sticky
fingers on another paper towel, and checked Caller ID. It was Collette. She
hadn’t talked to Collette since last week so she settled onto a kitchen bar
stool, ready for one of her usual pep talks. Marnie was desperate for one
today.
“Hey you,” Marnie answered.
“Mar, hon. He’s back in town.”
Marnie felt a glob of doughy pancake she
had just devoured rise to a lump in her throat.
Chapter Three
July 1988
What Marnie really remembered about that
night, the night she met him, was bad choice of underwear. She wasn’t looking
to meet anyone, didn’t consider she might be taking off her Zena jean shorts
and striped tank top; didn’t think a guy would be slipping her bra straps from
her shoulders to feel the firm flesh of her breasts, to pinch her nipples until
they tightened.
The underwear. The one thing – the only
thing – that held her back. Because she didn’t know if her underwear were sexy
enough for a guy to peel from her hips, to slide down her thighs, to toss to
the floor.
“I can’t.”
“Why?” He nuzzled into her, his stubbled
chin sending goose bumps everywhere, and then he licked her neck, and she
melted into his shoulder, smelling beer and cologne. They were both buzzed. She
shivered, in the dimly lit room, on a bed with a guy she hardly knew. She
didn’t know how far it would go, how far he would try to go, how far she would let him go.
She decided she wouldn’t go any further.
Only because she was probably wearing her Hanes yellow cotton panties. Instead
of giving him an answer, she felt for his face, and kissed him again, biting
his lower lip and pulling his hands back up to where they had been. That was
feeling pretty incredible anyway, and he was a great kisser.
He hadn’t asked again, and for that, he won
some major points. She liked him.
The party was loud. She remembered Phil
Collins’ song, Take Me Home blaring
on a tape deck, and him whispering, “I’d like to take you home.”
She lifted her hips, and although he kept
on his shorts, she could feel him through the denim. He felt big. Really big.
Marnie liked knowing he was so turned on. And Marnie knew if she stopped him
right now, he’d probably call. And that’s what she wanted.
“Stop,” she breathed heavily into his ear,
and nipped at his lobe. “We gotta stop.”
“Why?”
“We just do. You’re turning me on too
much.”
There, she said it. Other times, with other
guys, she said it only to be a tease. This time she said it because she meant
it. And she really, really didn’t want him to see her yellow cotton undies.
They’d have to wait. Plus, she wasn’t quite sure about his name. She thought it
started with a J.
He rolled off her, frustrated, she could
tell, but then he sighed, leaned onto his elbow, hooked his leg over hers, and
played with the strands of her hair. This gesture felt more intimate than everything
else they had been doing.
“Your eyes are pretty.”
“Oh, come on,” Marnie laughed. “What kind
of crap line is that? They’re brown.”
“No they’re not. They’re chocolaty.” He
stared at her. Kept staring.
Marnie stared back. Like a game. She
decided she wasn’t going to say anything, just wanted to stare into his hazel
eyes.
Finally, “Don’t you want to know my name?”
he asked.
“Do you want to know mine?”
“I think I’m interested in that, yes.” He
continued to twirl the piece of her loose hair. “And a lot more. Later. Okay?”
“Marnie. Marnie’s my name.”
“Marnie. That’s different.”
“Yep.”
“I never knew a Marnie before. That short
for something?”
“Actually, long. For Mar.” She touched his
shoulder, just to feel that he was there and real. His skin was warm. And tan.
“Mar. I like that. I’m Joe. Short for
Joseph.”
She giggled. “Nice to meet you, Joe.”
He smiled back at her, and then settled his
head down on the pillow. They were on the bed of one of his friends, she
guessed, because he had led her into the room after the party started dying
down, after the game of “Have You Ever” ended with him asking her, “Have you
ever seen the bedroom here?”
Marnie hadn’t even known whose house it
was; she just knew Collette had a friend who knew the kid who was having the
party, and that maybe there would be some cute guys there. Collette had
definitely been right.
“Give me your number?” he asked, still
playing with her hair, tickling her neck with his fingers. It made her tingle,
and she thought of her damned underwear again, wishing they had been different.
Maybe.
She rattled off her number and when he said
he needed to write it down, Marnie replied, “You want to call me, you’ll
remember it.”
“Tell it to me one more time. Slower.”
Chapter Four
October
2004
“Who saw him?”
Collette was barely in the door when Marnie
shot the question at her.
“What’d he look like? Was he with anyone?
How long’s he in town?”
Marnie felt on the verge of a breakdown
reoccurrence, and after what she’d been through the past summer, the
reappearance of Joe was going to bring her to the edge.
She was so fragile, and Collette of all
people had known her history, had been there when she had first met Joe, fifteen
years ago, when he had stormed into her life, and created a whirlwind, changed
her from being the person she might have been. And even though they had been together
for just a short while, he had thrust himself upon her so abruptly and
passionately, she hadn't seen it coming. And just like that, he was gone.
Marnie’s face was flushed, she paced the
room like a caged animal, plumped pillows, and wiped non-existent dust. She was
a nervous wreck at the mere thought he could be back.
"So, where is he?" she asked
again.
“Whoa, Marnie, how about, ‘Hey Collette,
would you like some coffee?’”
“Sorry. Coffee?” And Collette followed
Marnie into the kitchen where she poured one cup for Collette, cream and sugar,
and one for herself, black.
“Thanks. So anyway, no one’s actually seen
him yet. Fran's mom ordered something from their family bakery last week and
found out his grandmother’s turning ninety, and that the whole family’s coming
into town for it. So, technically, I guess he’s not officially back yet. But
he’s coming back. For the party.”
“His grandmother’s still alive? When’s the
party?”
“I don’t know, around Thanksgiving maybe?”
Marnie sat with her head in her hands, the
scent of coffee filling the room, steam wafting from their cups. Collette knew
enough to wait quietly while Marnie let her thoughts form, the history of her
past churning through her mind.
“What am I going to do?” Marnie said, more
to herself than to Collette.
“What you’ve wanted to do all of these
years, I suppose.” Collette said.
“I have to see him.”
Collette nodded.
“I have to tell him.”
I'm probably horribly wrong, but here goes: I think the first "truth" is a lie. I think you dealt with the ex through your writing, instead of contacting him. I guess I'll have to read the book first though, to find out more about all these "truths" ;-)
ReplyDeleteThank you for stopping by Stephanie! x
Thank you sooo much for hosting me on your blog! I can't tell you which is the lie yet!
ReplyDeleteI am going with lemons are your favorite fruit as the lie...I just have a hunch. :D
ReplyDelete